Spontaneous Emergence of a Causal Time Axis in Euclidean Space from a Gauged Rotational Symmetry Theory

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Walker, Michael

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MDPI AG

Abstract

We demonstrate the emergence of an effective "time" axis in the ground state of a gauged rotational symmetry theory in four-dimensional Euclidean space. In so doing, we remove the necessity of Wick rotation to Lorentz spacetime, an arbitrary and sometimes ill-defined procedure, especially for gravity-related theories. We begin by adapting the Cho-Duan-Ge decomposition to the gauge theory of the four-dimensional rotational symmetry group (Formula presented.), where it identifies the maximal Abelian subgroup (Formula presented.) in a gauge covariant manner. We then find the one-loop effective theory to have a stable condensate of monopoles corresponding to the reduction of (Formula presented.) symmetry to (Formula presented.). The construction of the condensate ensures that the four-dimensional spatial direction of its field strength must coincide with that of this embedding, and that a magnetic potential must be worked against to divert a trajectory away from this direction. Indeed, movement along this direction represents minimal potential energy. We take it to be the time direction. The gauge-dependent nature of the condensate is such that different gauge choices may lead to different time axes and we show on very general grounds that these different coordinate systems must be relatable by transformations of Lorentz form.

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Symmetry

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Open Access

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